Selasa, 16 Mei 2017

smaller phone about big screens

smaller phone about big screens - The C Note has the same premium design as the flagship UMIDIGI Z Pro, with an aluminium alloy body and a large, bright full-HD screen. It’s 0.1mm thicker than its brother, but otherwise has identical dimensions, and is 3g lighter at 172g. Also see: Best Android phones 2017s whiterossesme, well we have collected a lot of data from the field directly and from many other blogs so very complete his discussion here about smaller phone about big screens, on this blog we also have to provide the latest automotive information from all the brands associated with the automobile. ok please continue reading:

Plenty of companies think their phones "magically" do what you want without having to lift a finger, but Huawei backs its new Honor Magic -- the prettiest Honor phone we've seen -- with a whole lot of built-in settings you don't usually get.

The company says it's using AI to respond to physical sensors, like the proximity sensor, to make the phone know who you are, what you're doing now, and what you might want to do next.

A few examples of the Magic's powers:

You pick it up and its infrared sensors scan your face. Coupled with the fingerprint reader in the home button, it will only surface notification messages when the phone has verified it's you, so that nosy neighbors don't get to see who's pinging you or why.

If it's dark (or if you cover the ambient light sensor), the phone can surface a flashlight option on the lock screen. You can swipe to turn it on. Once you turn it off, you can't toggle it on again. Having the flashlight at your fingertips is one of those anticipate-your-needs functions, which will theoretically make it faster and easier to find and use.

huawei-honor-magic-1083-001.jpg16Hands-on Huawei's 'Magic' phoneHuawei also points out some capabilities that seem like rebranded features from Google Now on Android, like pressing and holding the home screen button to find out more information about a topic or place (Huawei calls this "deep think"). On the whole, though, we haven't seen sensors programmed to quite this extent -- there's an entire submenu dedicated to apps and services that the Magic can tap into, anything from flights and taxi information to streaming entertainment.

The phone's selling in China right now, but it isn't clear how much integration we'll see carry over into other countries where the Honor Magic could go on sale.